February 11, 2009 4:50 PM

Michael Moore's Latest Target: Your HMO

(AP)  It could have been a college reunion: hugs, tears, laughter, photos, and a big friendly guy in shorts and sneakers organizing it all.

But the guy in shorts was Michael Moore, whose new documentary, "Sicko," takes aim at the U.S. health care industry with the same fury — laced with humor, of course, and plenty of statistics — that he directed at the Bush administration in his hit "Fahrenheit 9/11."

And the people who'd flown in for this intimate first screening, a day after the film had been shipped to the Cannes Film Festival, included grateful Sept. 11 "first responders," suffering lung problems or other ailments from their days at ground zero. In the film, Moore takes them to Cuba and tries to get them treated at the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay — where, he contends, terror suspects were getting better medical care than the heroes of 9/11.

The Cuba trip actually accounts for just a small part of "Sicko," which aims its wrath at private insurance and pharmaceutical companies and HMOs, while praising socialized medicine in countries like France and Britain. Moore fills it with stories like that of a woman whose ambulance ride after a car crash wasn't covered — because it wasn't "pre-approved."

But Cuba has loomed large in the flurry of prerelease publicity. That's because the director, an unabashed critic of President Bush, is being investigated by the Treasury Department for possibly violating the U.S. trade embargo by traveling to the island nation. Moore has fired back with an open letter accusing the administration of "abusing the federal government for raw, crass political purposes."

At his screening Tuesday evening at a Manhattan hotel, however, Moore was focused on the reaction of his invited guests.

"Three years ago tonight, we had the first screening of 'Fahrenheit 9/11,' with victims' families," he told them. "It was a very powerful experience, and now we're honored to have all of you here. We're very proud of this film. We're confident it will have a significant impact."

When the lights came up, Reggie Cervantes, a former 9/11 "first responder" who now lives in Oklahoma, spoke first.

"It was funny. It was real," said Cervantes, 46, who says she suffers from pulmonary ailments, esophageal reflex, post-traumatic stress disorder, ear and eye infections and other problems stemming from time at ground zero. Of the trip, she said: "It feels surreal. Were we really there?"

"This trip opened my eyes," offered Bill Maher, 54, another former ground zero volunteer from Maywood, N.J., who had extensive dental work in Cuba. "I was uneducated. I remembered the Cuban missile crisis. Now, you know what? I'm going back!"

"I'm going with you," replied Cervantes.

Donna Smith, in from Denver with her husband, Larry, was in tears when she spoke. The film opens with their painful story: Plagued with health problems, they were forced to sell their home and move into the storage room of their daughter's house because they couldn't cope with health costs, even though they were insured.

"Health care is an embarrassment to our nation," Donna told Moore. "You give dignity to every American in this film."

Lost in all the publicity over Moore's trip is the reason he went to Cuba in the first place.

He says he hadn't intended to go, but then discovered the U.S. government was boasting of the excellent medical care it provides terror suspects detained at Guantanamo. So Moore decided that the 9/11 workers and a few other patients, all of whom had serious trouble paying for care at home, should have the same chance.

"Here the detainees were getting colonoscopies and nutrition counseling," Moore told The Associated Press in an interview, "and these people at home were suffering. I said, 'We gotta go and see if we can get these people the same treatment the government gives al Qaeda.' It seemed the only fair thing to do."



© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
  • Tucker Reals

    Tucker Reals is a senior news editor and overnight site editor for CBSNews.com, based at CBS News' London bureau.

Add a Comment See all 68 Comments
by lil_d3vil May 21, 2007 8:08 PM EDT
"The VA Gives some of the best care are"

After watching the care they gave my father and watching the care they gave to others while taking care of him while getting treatment for lung cancer alls I have to say are you kidding??

The VA hospital in Oregon compares to Walter Reed as to condition and needs to be torn down as its dirty.. moldy.. etc. etc. Staff is horrible and over worked and not enough hired to care for their patients properly. You think things are bad now with our health care system?? just wait till Bush gets his AMNESTY freebie ride to the same illegals who have been draining our heath care resources for decades, its only going get alot worse.
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by hhkeller May 21, 2007 7:24 PM EDT
Healthcare lobbyists spend more money on our Congressmen than it would cost to cover the uninsured.

One less B2 Bomber would cover the uninsured.

It's just a matter of priorities.
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by ecuadoriana May 21, 2007 7:15 PM EDT
"...we give it for free [health care] to illegal aliens and fly children from over the world to America for help.." Posted by rainyday9 at 03:06 PM : May 21, 2007

Not so true about the illegal aliens. They get cr*ppy care from free clinics (which are open & free to all citizens, as well, who want that poorer quality care). They don't walk into Johns Hopkins & get free brain surgery or mammograms, etc.

As for flying kids in from other countries, yep they do that & for free. But it's usually for the most severe cases; The kid born with no mouth, or 3 legs or attached at the chest... These cases are viewed as "practice" to keep the doctors, nurses & surgeons skills "sharp".

The truth is, if the kid dies from the surgery, the parents won't be suing the doctor & hospital. The kid would have died anyway back in his home country. It's win-win-win: The surgeons get to practice with out fear of losing their license, the kid gets a shot at survival, & the US gets top notch doctors (for those who can afford it).

I was told this by nurses at a children's hospital where my daughter received care as an infant.
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by rainyday9 May 21, 2007 6:06 PM EDT
I don't care who owns a big screen tv on rent-to-own, or who goes to restaurants. We have the finest health care available in the world, we give it for free to illegal aliens and fly children from over the world to America for help.. and that's all great. But why are American citizens not getting proper health care? The ones who work for it... or work 3 part time jobs to support their family... they have no insurance. The system sucks.
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by ralan40 May 21, 2007 5:53 PM EDT
does anyone really really honestly think that the government is capable to fix ANYTHING????

I ask anyone of these posters who want universal healthcare to give me JUST 1 example where the Government reforming something has made things better for the greater good.
I hope there's an inclusion for good psych benefits for people with delusions that the government will make things right with the american people.
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by actornaught May 21, 2007 5:52 PM EDT
"Big screen tvs, huge homes, expensive vehicles, ..."

This, folks, is what you call a 'Straw Man' argument. If you believe that the poor are defined this way, and then extend it as a reason to deny a safety net, shame on you, you've been duped.
Reply to this comment
by ecuadoriana May 21, 2007 1:55 PM EDT
Interested4, you are so right on!!!

"...I'd be willing to bet that you could find plenty of "poor" people complaining about their $100 meds while sitting in front of their $2000 big screen that they are renting-to-own at some ridiculous interest rate..."
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by ecuadoriana May 21, 2007 1:47 PM EDT
"here's one for you, why do I STILL have ANY co-pay...?" Posted by merdercycler at 06:42 PM : May 20, 2007

Co-pay is BS. With all the money you pay into insurance it's disgusting that they should insist on a "co-pay". You've ALREADY paid! And Plenty!

The biggest insult is when they decide that what ails you isn't covered (because after all: insurance companies are medical experts who know you & your condition intimately, right?).

Then they'll you which Dr. to go to- even if it's miles out of your way past the perfectly good one that's around the corner from your house!

The ins. cos. are scams/scums. I refuse to get ins. now & instead pay cash. When you pay cash you actually get a discount- the rates are jacked up for the ins. billing! Go figure. I put the money I would have given to an ins. co. into a savings account. Now I get to call the shots when I need health care.

If more people started taking more control of their care, they'd actually start to take better care & control of their health.

I know plenty of people who complain that their ins. won't cover this ot that, but those people continue to smoke, eat cr*ppy food, get no exercise...
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by shortfuse7 May 21, 2007 4:16 AM EDT
Now lets all go to wallmart.
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by merdercycler May 20, 2007 9:42 PM EDT
here's one for you, why do I STILL have ANY co-pay when I have medicare,AARP supplimental ins, as well as VA medical benifits? now that is three sources of insurance! you would think that somehow there would be enough to no longer have a co-pay.both the VA and medicare want to know what my total worth in assets are( and I am by no means wealthy) to rate my co-pay,done so that I have to drain any assets to pay for my health care so that the government or my private carrier can just collect money, not provide the benifits I pay for. the least possible expendature to them is of course thier goal so they have the maximum profit, not the ability to be able to help more people as a result of the profits.insurance companies are just calculated risk gamblers.if you are ill and really need the insurance they deny you coverage. they find a way not to insure you because they know they will have to pay out on you which is not conducive to a target profit margin.bottom line is hope you just keel over quickly as opposed to having to suffer and be drained of whatever you have slowly.between drug companies,ins. companies,the government,and the medical profession you don't have a chance to hang on to much to hand down to the next generation to do the SAME thing all over again,the wheel just keeps on spinning........remember it's money, not compassion that rules the world
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